France tries to soften local style of Islam

France tries to soften local style of Islam | csmonitor.com
Page 1 of 3
from the May 06, 2004 edition - http://www.csmonitor.com/2004/0506/p01s04-woeu.html
Officials there have deported two allegedly radical clerics, leading a Europe-wide crackdown.
By Peter Ford | Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor
PARIS - As European governments crack down on radical imams as part of their battle against
Islamic terrorism, they have laid bare a central problem for millions of their Muslim citizens: a lack of
homegrown religious leaders to guide their integration into Western societies.
Overwhelmingly foreign, and sometimes speaking only Arabic, Europe's imams often have little
understanding of their host countries, and their teachings run counter to modern European values
and gender roles, say Muslim leaders and government officials. But there seems little chance of any
change soon, they add.
"There is an abyss between the imams' vision of the world and that of young Muslims born here,"
says Dounia Bouzar, a member of the French Council for the Muslim Religion, a body established
last year to lead the Muslim community.
France has taken the lead in a Europe-wide crackdown on radical clerics. French officials have
deported two allegedly fundamentalist imams in recent weeks, and are threatening to expel three
more. Italy expelled a Senegalese imam last November, and the British government is seeking to
deport the Egyptian born radical cleric Abu Hamza al-Masri, accusing him of supporting al Qaeda.
"Under the cover of religion, individuals present on our soil have been using extremist language and
issuing calls for violence," French Interior Minister Dominique de Villepin said Saturday. "These favor
the installation of terrorist movements. It is necessary therefore to oppose this together and by all
available means."
Since the Madrid bombing in March, European authorities are paying new attention to the possibility
that fundamentalist preachers are sheltering and supporting jihadist bombers.
French authorities announced with great fanfare two weeks ago that they were deporting Abdelkader
Bouziane, an Algerian imam, after he defended wife-beating and stoning adulterous women in a
magazine interview. They expelled him before he had a chance to appeal the ruling, which a court
later overturned.
Officials told reporters that Mr. Bouziane had ties to terrorist groups, and that the police were keeping
a close eye on about 30 mosques whose preachers were suspected of fundamentalist leanings.
The hasty expulsion drew criticism. "You cannot fight an antidemocratic movement by using its own
methods," complained opposition Socialist Party spokesman Malik Boutih on French radio Tuesday.
Some Muslim leaders fear the government has made political use of the affair. "They are dramatizing
it so as to show that all imams are foreign," complains Lhaj Thami Breze, president of the influential
Union of Islamic Organizations of France (UOIF). "They are preparing the ground to set up a
government institute to train imams, and we are against such government interference."
Ninety percent from abroad
http://www.csmonitor.com/2004/0506/p01s04-woeu.htm
11/7/2005
France tries to soften local style of Islam | csmonitor.com
Page 2 of 3
An estimated 90 percent of imams in France are indeed foreign citizens, mostly from North Africa.
Some "have not evolved in French society," says Mr. Breze, whose group is considered close to the
Muslim Brotherhood. "Some adapt fast, but lots do not."
Dalil Boubaker, the head of Paris's Grand Mosque, is harsher. "There are 1,500 places of Islamic
worship in France," he says. "Five hundred of them have proper imams. The other thousand are
clowns."
Who chooses the imams?
While the Algerian government (which funds the Grand Mosque) sends 80 imams to France, and the
Moroccan government sends dozens more, most prayer leaders are chosen by local groups that run
their own mosques, often in the run-down, big-city suburbs where most of France's five million
Muslims live.
Very few of them are paid for their services. Most live on welfare, supplemented by donations from
the faithful.
The imams of the 250 mosques affiliated with the UOIF must meet certain criteria, says Breze.
"Our preachers must speak French,they must have been here for many years if they are not French
citizens, and their sermons must strengthen social peace," he insists. "We don't want imams who
rouse their congregations against their country or a government."
Authorizing imams
Breze would like to see the French Council for the Muslim Religion (CFCM) - set up last year at the
urging of the government to provide the authorities with a representative Islamic body they could deal
with - set similar conditions in drawing up a list of approved imams.
Dr. Boubaker, head of the CFCM, proposed such a scheme in a meeting Monday with Prime Minister
Jean Pierre Raffarin. "We must distinguish between real imams and subversives who call themselves
imams," he says. "Imams in France should absolutely stop talking politics."
The CFCM, riven by internal divisions between different branches of Islam, would probably not able
to draw up a credible list of "authorized" imams, however, and some members doubt it should try. "It
might look like police-style management," worries Ms. Bouzar. "A lot of Muslims already think the
government is trying to control them through the council, and this could revive the anxieties."
Some Muslim leaders look to the training of French-born young men as imams as the solution,
hoping that they would be more moderate and nonpolitical, and better attuned to the realities of life in
a secular Western nation.
The UOIF runs a small college in the French countryside that turns out about 10 new imams a year,
but officials acknowledge that this is nowhere near enough to meet the demand. The problem is not
only to find enough young Frenchmen attracted by the life of an imam; equally difficult is the question
of financing a training institute.
In Muslim countries, governments generally subsidize such institutions. In secular France, with its
strict separation of church and state, such an idea is anathema. "This is precisely the CFCM's
mission and task. The ball is in their court," says Interior Ministry spokeswoman Veronique Guillermo.
"The French state will have nothing to do with how a religion organizes itself."
But the Muslim community in France does not have the resources to fund four-year imam training
courses, Muslim leaders say, and they are reluctant to turn to traditional donors, such as wealthy
patrons in Gulf countries, for fear of the influence that would give them.
"The question of money is key," says Bouzar. "But the whole imam situation is a reflection of the
state of relations between French society and Islam. Islam used to be seen as a foreigner's religion.
Today we have a generation which wants to be Muslim and French. Before we can decide what we
want from our imams we have to reflect on what it means to be a Muslim in a secular society, and we
http://www.csmonitor.com/2004/0506/p01s04-woeu.htm
11/7/2005
France tries to soften local style of Islam | csmonitor.com
Page 3 of 3
have a long way to go in that reflection."
Full HTML version of this story which may include photos, graphics, and related links
www.csmonitor.com | Copyright © 2004 The Christian Science Monitor. All rights reserved.
For permission to reprint/republish this article, please email Copyright
http://www.csmonitor.com/2004/0506/p01s04-woeu.htm
11/7/2005